G# melodic minor is as follows:
G# A# B C# D# E# Fx G# F# E D# C# B A# G#
In melodic minor scales, the 6th and 7th scale degrees are raised when ascending and lowered when descending. Notice that the 7th when going up is an F double sharp.
The F-sharp natural minor scale consists of these notes:F-sharp, G-sharp, A,G,C-sharp,D, and EThe F-sharp harmonic minor scale consists of these notes:F-sharp, G-sharp, A, B, C-sharp, D and E-sharp.The F-sharp melodic minor scale consists of these notes:[going up] F-sharp, G-sharp, A, B, C-sharp, D-sharp and E-sharp.[going down] F-sharp, E, D, C-sharp, B, A and G-sharp.
The minor scale that includes F sharp and D sharp is the B minor scale. In this scale, the notes are B, C#, D, E, F#, G, and A. The presence of F sharp and D sharp is characteristic of the B natural minor scale. Additionally, the B harmonic minor scale also includes these notes, with the seventh note raised to A sharp.
In A-sharp minor, every single note has a sharp. For the harmonic minor, the G♯ is raised to Gx (both ways) and for the melodic minor Fx and Gx is used on the way up but is reverted back to the key signature (normal F♯ and G♯ on the way down).
F♯, g♯, a, b, c♯, d#, e#, f#, e, d, c#, b, a, g#, f#.
An E natural minor scale is written with a one-sharp key signature, so you just write out the scale in semibreves and add an additional D sharp for the harmonic minor, and two additional sharps to the sixth and seventh degrees when ascending in the melodic minor (C sharp and D sharp). You lower the sharps and revert back to the natural minor when you descend through the scale.
The F-sharp natural minor scale consists of these notes:F-sharp, G-sharp, A,G,C-sharp,D, and EThe F-sharp harmonic minor scale consists of these notes:F-sharp, G-sharp, A, B, C-sharp, D and E-sharp.The F-sharp melodic minor scale consists of these notes:[going up] F-sharp, G-sharp, A, B, C-sharp, D-sharp and E-sharp.[going down] F-sharp, E, D, C-sharp, B, A and G-sharp.
The natural minor scale with the most sharp notes is E natural minor, which has one sharp note (F#).
Hi! Im Kitty_1616! I play the alto sax anbd I know almost all scales. So..... The notes to the A minor Harmonic scale are: * A * B * C * D * E * F * G sharp * A The notes for the A minor Melodic scale GOING UP are: * A * B * C * D * F SHARP * G SHARP * A Going down, the F & G are not sharped. Glad I could help you! Kitty_1616 Hi! Im Kitty_1616! I play the alto sax anbd I know almost all scales. So..... The notes to the A minor Harmonic scale are: * A * B * C * D * E * F * G sharp * A The notes for the A minor Melodic scale GOING UP are: * A * B * C * D * F SHARP * G SHARP * A Going down, the F & G are not sharped. Glad I could help you! Kitty_1616
The minor scale that includes F sharp and D sharp is the B minor scale. In this scale, the notes are B, C#, D, E, F#, G, and A. The presence of F sharp and D sharp is characteristic of the B natural minor scale. Additionally, the B harmonic minor scale also includes these notes, with the seventh note raised to A sharp.
In A-sharp minor, every single note has a sharp. For the harmonic minor, the G♯ is raised to Gx (both ways) and for the melodic minor Fx and Gx is used on the way up but is reverted back to the key signature (normal F♯ and G♯ on the way down).
The D minor scale for violin consists of the notes D, E, F, G, A, B♭, and C. In this scale, the B is flattened, making it a B♭. There are no sharps in the natural D minor scale, but if you were to play the harmonic or melodic variations, they may include raised notes, specifically C♯ in the harmonic form.
The C major scale and its relative minor, the A minor scale. C Major.
Harmonic Minor - The first minor scale you will learn, uses the accidentals in the key signature with a sharp 7th. Melodic Minor - First half of the scale is minor, the second half is major (ascending). Descending, only the accidentals in the scale are used. Natural Minor - Same notes as the relative major but ending on the first note of the minor scale. Hope this helps.
The sixth and seventh degrees are raised a half-step when going up (notice that sometimes when raising a note you'll end up on another white key), like the C-sharp melodic minor scale - where you need to raise B, but most of the time you just play the black key to the right on the way up, and revert to the natural notes on the way down.
UP: d sharp e sharp f sharp g sharp a sharp b sharp c double-sharp d sharp DOWN: d sharp c sharp b natural a sharp g sharp f sharp e sharp d sharp
F♯, g♯, a, b, c♯, d#, e#, f#, e, d, c#, b, a, g#, f#.
An E natural minor scale is written with a one-sharp key signature, so you just write out the scale in semibreves and add an additional D sharp for the harmonic minor, and two additional sharps to the sixth and seventh degrees when ascending in the melodic minor (C sharp and D sharp). You lower the sharps and revert back to the natural minor when you descend through the scale.